Tiger Ray pair

Species Spotlight: Tiger Rays Return to Lemur Forest

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A pair of tigers is now prowling the lush wilds of Lemur Forest, but to see them, you’ll have to look down. Aquarists recently introduced a pair of Tiger Stingrays to the freshwater stream flowing through the exhibit. 

 The pair includes a 14-year-old male and a 13-year-old female. At 31.9 pounds, the female far outweighs the 20.1-pound male, but if everything works out as planned,  the two make begin exhibiting mating behavior soon. 

Tiger Ray close up

“We recently saw some breeding activity,” says Aquarist II Rachel Thayer. If the rays do manage to breed, it would be a huge benefit for the Aquarium and for the species as a whole. These rays are part of the Tiger Stingray Species Survival Plan and have been determined to have desirable genetics for breeding. This is especially important given the low number of males that have been approved to breed within the SSP, Thayer says. 

“That makes our pair even more genetically valuable,” she says. 
 

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